Comparing casual users with members we find a few notable differences.
-todo
Overall, members take the majority of rides.
Casual use doubles on the weekend, even exceeding member use.
Breaking down the number of rides by month, we can see that while the season is important for all riders, casual users are much less willing to ride in the winter months. From December to February, the system sees very little casual use.
Summarizing the previous three graphs, casual use of the system is much more variable than for members. It is maximized during summer weekends and minimized during winter weekdays.
This is a bit surprising. For trips that start and end at different stations, the average trip is about the same distance for both classes of users, about two and a half kilometers.
Seasonally, average trip distance is smallest during the winter and largest in summer, but only by about half a kilometer. Trip distance does not change much over the course of the week.
For the above analysis we removed trips that start and end at the same station since, lacking GPS data to track the ride, they have an apparent distance of zero. We believe it’s likely that pleasure cruises make up a large portion of these rides. These rides average an hour long for casual users. In the next section on ride duration we’ll see the average of all casual trips is just over 30 minutes, an interesting difference.
| Rider Type | Possible pleasure cruises | Avg trip minutes | Percent of trips |
|---|---|---|---|
| casual | 256348 | 60 | 15.0% |
| member | 85576 | 25 | 3.8% |
These round-trips represent about 10% of all bike use and about 15% of all casual use. We also see above that casual users outnumber members 3 to 1 in this interesting subset of rides. We’ll return to these trips in a later section, after we have explored ride duration.
Casuals ride more than twice as long as members, on average.
Seasonally, casual rides have a large amount of variation. The small number of winter trips taken tend to be short - half the length of rides at the peak of summer.
Earlier we noted the possibility that 10% of all rides (and 15% of casual rides) were round-trip pleasure cruises starting and ending at the same station, likely near the rider’s home. The two graphs below provide more evidence for this idea.
If our hypothesis is correct, the percentage of this type of ride should shrink in winter and grow in summer and be mostly confined to casual users. This first graph shows exactly this pattern.
Second, if our idea is correct we should also see trip duration becoming longer in summer and shorter in winter. This should strongly affect casual users but have little effect on members, who have a 45-minute time limit. This graph demonstrates this pattern as well.
Going further to learn how these rides differ in destination, length, or speed would require some sort of GPS tracking data from the bikes, which is outside the scope of this dataset. For now we note the strong possibility that about ten percent of all trips are taken for enjoyment rather than travel, and that casual users dominate this market segment.
We’ve seen that casuals and members ride about the same distances, but members spend less time on the bikes. The graph below shows that members are about 30% faster on average.
We now know that members ride more often and casuals ride longer - so who rides the most total minutes? Casual users do!
Since casual users spend so much more time in the saddle, it might be a worthwhile experiment to trial a set of more comfortable, relaxed-ride bikes aimed at users who want to cruise in comfort. In the maps section below we identify regions of the city where casual users dominate the ridership.
Here we map all the bike stations in the system and colour them by the percentage of casual rides that start there.
Next let’s highlight hot spots. Any station with over 70% casual use will be red, and we’ll also give busier stations larger dots.
Finally let’s zoom in on the notable hot spot near Navy Pier. Of all stations with over 70% casual use, these are the busiest.
These stations are all on and around the waterfront between Soldier Field and Navy Pier. They represent what is easily the most popular casual use desination anywhere in the city, demonstrating a consistent pattern of activity by casual users of the system.
In our last piece of analysis we will examine the overall traffic flow for patterns. First up, traffic volume at all stations.